Roller Bearing Company of America, Inc. v. Raytheon Company

CourtDistrict Court, D. Massachusetts
DecidedAugust 3, 2022
Docket1:20-cv-10889
StatusUnknown

This text of Roller Bearing Company of America, Inc. v. Raytheon Company (Roller Bearing Company of America, Inc. v. Raytheon Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Massachusetts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Roller Bearing Company of America, Inc. v. Raytheon Company, (D. Mass. 2022).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT DISTRICT OF MASSACHUSETTS

ROLLER BEARING COMPANY * OF AMERICA, INC., * * Plaintiff, * v. * Civil Action No. 1:20-cv-10889-IT * RAYTHEON COMPANY, * * Defendant. *

MEMORANDUM & ORDER

August 3, 2022 TALWANI, D.J. Roller Bearing Company of America, Inc. (“RBC”) brings this lawsuit against Raytheon Company (“Raytheon”) alleging that Raytheon breached a nondisclosure agreement with RBC and misappropriated RBC’s trade secrets in violation of state and federal law. Specifically, RBC alleges that Raytheon distributed RBC’s trade secrets and proprietary information to a third party, Multicut Denmark A/S (“Multicut Denmark”), without informing Multicut Denmark that the information was the property of RBC and without taking proper steps, under the nondisclosure agreement with RBC, to ensure that Multicut Denmark did not further disseminate the information without proper protections in place. As RBC alleges, Raytheon asserted ownership over RBC’s trade secrets and proprietary information and expressly authorized Multicut Denmark to disseminate the information without limitation or protection. RBC alleges that Multicut Denmark thereafter disseminated the information to Multicut North America, Inc. (“MNA”), and to RBC’s competitors, causing RBC to suffer financial injury. Pending before the court is RBC’s Motion to Compel [Doc. No. 95], seeking from Raytheon the production of four documents from 2018 and testimony of two witnesses concerning the documents. Raytheon opposes the motion, asserting a privilege based on a joint defense or common interest agreement. RBC responds that no such agreement existed prior to 2020, and in any event, that Raytheon waived any such privilege based on the disclosure of another document from 2018. For the following reasons, RBC’s Motion to Compel [Doc. No. 95] is GRANTED. I. Background

A. RBC’s Allegations Regarding Events Prior to July 2018 As alleged by RBC, in 2014, Raytheon and RBC entered into an agreement obligating each party to retain the confidentiality of the other party’s respective trade secrets. Am. Compl. ¶ 13 [Doc. No. 21]. Pursuant to that agreement, in 2015, Raytheon provided RBC plans for a rod end bearing product, and RBC then created and provided to Raytheon specialized new and unique rod end bearings. Id. at ¶¶ 17-21. RBC retained ownership rights to the drawings and specifications of the rod end bearings. Id. at ¶ 22. RBC alleges further that Raytheon provided Multicut Denmark in 2016 with a set of drawings and specifications, which incorporated RBC’s trade secrets, without taking adequate

steps to protect RBC’s confidential and proprietary information and trade secrets. Id. at ¶ 34. In 2017, Multicut Denmark and MNA (collectively, “Multicut”) engaged RBC in negotiations for RBC to be the exclusive supplier of its proprietary rod end bearings for the Raytheon project at issue. Id. at ¶ 40. In May or June 2017, Multicut Denmark sent Raytheon drawing’s incorporating RBC’s design and specifications and trade secrets to RBC’s competitors. Id. at ¶ 50. In July 2017, RBC contacted Multicut’s CEO Frank Dühring by email “to inform him that RBC had discovered [Multicut] had improperly distributed RBC’s trade secrets contained in . . . Raytheon[’s] drawings and specifications . . . .” Id. at ¶ 54. Dühring forwarded Raytheon a copy of this email, as well as his response to RBC in which he denied that the Raytheon drawings contained any trade secrets belonging to RBC. Id. at ¶ 55. These communications suggest that Raytheon knew, by July 2017, that RBC was claiming rights to trade secrets incorporated by Raytheon into its drawings and specifications and RBC was asserting that Multicut had distributed these trade secrets improperly. Id. B. RBC’s Lawsuit Against MNA and Subsequent Communications Prior to an Action Being Filed Against Raytheon In June 2018, RBC filed an action in Connecticut state court against MNA. See June 28, 2018 State Ct. Compl., Roller Bearing Company of America, Inc. v. Multicut North America, Inc., 3:18-cv-01212-SRU (D. Conn. July 23, 2018) [#1-1]. MNA promptly removed the action to the United States District Court for the District of Connecticut. See Notice of Removal, Roller Bearing Company of America, Inc. v. Multicut North America, Inc., 3:18-CV-01212-SRU [#1] (the “Connecticut Action”).

1. Disclosed Communications After RBC commenced the Connecticut Action, Raytheon and Multicut exchanged emails and documents related to RBC’s claims that have been disclosed in discovery. Multicut’s CEO Dühring inquired on October 4, 2018, about Raytheon’s drawings for sleeve and rod end bearings, seeking written confirmation from Raytheon that (i) Raytheon is the rightful owner of the design of the part on the drawings, and that the drawing is proprietary to Raytheon and (ii) Multicut can ask any source for this parts as long as they meet the requirements on the drawing and that the suppler/manufacturer is not on the OFAC and SDN list. Ex. 4 [Doc. No. 92-4] (“Bealer/Dühring E-mails”). On October 25, 2018, Ian Bealer responded, in relevant part, that

Raytheon had reviewed the sleeve and rod end bearing drawings and confirmed that both drawings contain only Raytheon Proprietary data and data available in publicly available design standards. Id. 2. Undisclosed Communications As set forth on Raytheon’s privilege log, Bealer and Dühring exchanged two other e- mails, dated October 5, 2018, and October 25, 2018, each with a PowerPoint attachment, concerning Raytheon’s technical review of the rod end bearing at issue (“2018 Logged Documents”).1 Raytheon asserts that the 2018 Logged Documents contain analysis performed by

Bealer at the request of Raytheon’s in-house counsel in a joint defense effort to respond to RBC’s allegations. C. RBC’s Lawsuits Against Raytheon and Multicut Denmark and the Written Joint Defense Agreement In May 2020, RBC initiated a second suit in Connecticut, this time naming Multicut Denmark.2 RBC also initiated the action in this court against Raytheon. On July 23, 2020, Raytheon and Multicut executed a written joint defense agreement. See January 19, 2022 Day Pitney Letter, Ex. 2 [Doc. No. 92-2]. In September 2020, RBC sought to transfer the instant action to Connecticut, arguing that transfer was warranted in light of “the complete overlap of RBC’s claims in all three actions and the inextricably intertwined facts and evidence . . . .” Pl.’s Mem. 6 [Doc. No. 29]. In opposing transfer, Raytheon asserted: the present action and the District of Connecticut cases do not involve the same operative facts. As noted above, the gravamen of this action concerns Raytheon’s supposed assertion of ownership of the alleged trade secret and disclosure to others. The Multicut cases on the other hand concern Multicut’s subsequent interactions with RBC and other vendors, in which Raytheon was not involved. At

1 These two emails and two PowerPoint attachments are the only documents withheld by Raytheon based on the common interest privilege. Raytheon states that they present in duplicates, and therefore they appear nine times in Raytheon’s privilege log. Raytheon Privilege Log, Ex. 10 [Doc. No. 92-10]. 2 The Connecticut court subsequently consolidated the two actions pending there. Order, Roller Bearing Company of America, Inc. v. Multicut North America, Inc., 3:18-CV-01212-SRU [#68]. most, the cases have some adjacent facts on the periphery, but do not arise out of the same transaction or occurrence. Indeed, none of the allegations in the Complaint or in the Motion discloses any transaction that involved all three of Raytheon, RBC, and Multicut. Opp’n 11 [Doc. No. 35]. D. Discovery in the Connecticut and Massachusetts Actions In discovery in the Connecticut Action, Multicut produced the Bealer/Dühring Emails. Neither Multicit nor Raytheon has sought to claw back or assert any privilege as to the Bealer/Dühring Emails.

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